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Vandrevala Foundation

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6 challenges teens face when moving to a new city

Moving to a new city alone can feel unmanageable. You can feel lonely, depressing, and terrifying – but it doesn’t have to. Leaving behind your old home and moving to a new city can be very nerve-wracking. Fortunately, there are ways to get well prepared and avoid, or at least be ready to face all the knocks you can stumble upon down the road. You can overcome all this by being prepared with your transition plan:

1. A perfect house

Hunting for a good house in a new city can be difficult if the accommodation has not already been provided by your institute or college. You have to juggle between agents and owners. Thankfully nowadays you can conduct your house search online before moving to another place.Some website that can help are,Housing.com, commonfloor.com, Magicbricks.com. You can also connect with Facebook forums who deal with brokers of flats/houses.

2. Good food

Initially, food can be a major concern. It might cost you more if you eat outside almost every day but cooking on your own when you are still unpacking can be equally nerve-wracking. Also getting accustomed to a new city’s local cuisine can take a while. For your rescue, you can search for some good Tiffin centers, or you can also try food delivery apps. Well, if you can experiment sometime, you can get an induction plate or a micro-oven or hire a maid, if youcan afford.

3. Recalibrating to a new environment

You might face a language/culture barrier. Elsewhere too, each Indian city has its own tradition, culture, and beliefs. It might take a while to appreciate and fit in. You have to allow yourself to settle down at a new city, physically and emotionally. After which, you can develop an interest to learn about the local culture. Your college mates or colleagues can be a good medium to learn about the city.

4. Navigating within the city

Being in a new city you clearly don’t know the roads that's what certain auto or cab drivers count their advantage on by charging twice as extra than normal. Finding means of transportation in a new city is a tedious task. All you can really rely on in such situations is your smartphone for maps or Google offline maps.

5. Pack wisely

Packing is tough no matter how far away you’re moving. But if you’re moving alone, packing too much might just shoot you in the foot later, because when you arrive in your new city, there won’t be anyone to assist you to unpack. Leave behind or donate your stuff if you can. Label each carton and don’t unpack all is a single day.

6. Budget management

You should keep a note of all the possible expenses coming your way. It’s always wise to keep aside a certain amount always to meet exigencies. This is how teens can learn budgeting and cost controlling.

While there are a lot of challenges considering moving to another city, there are maybe more good solutions to overcome them. Remind yourself to stay involved and dynamic every morning you stand in front of the mirror. If you do that, you’ll be able to handle any issue that may emerge down the road. Keep in mind that you made the best judgment by moving to a new home and stick to that feeling.

NEXT STORY

The 5 P’s of Online safety

Almost everyone around us is on social media, has access to few or more apps and has shopped for something online. All these activities require you to fill in your details, personal and financial. This may, however, also lead to many threats online. So here we are with few useful tips that will help you stay safe online and free from any harm.

1. Passwords

Passwords are meant to protect your information so make sure your passwords are strong with a combination of letters (upper and lowercase), numbers and special characters that are difficult for others to guess. Do not share your passwords with anyone and keep them changing on a regular basis.

2. Privacy settings

Wisely you can use the privacy settings on various social media and apps to control who can see what information about you.

3. Personal information

Don’t share your personal information like email, phone number, address or name of your school to people you don’t know well or at all.

4. Profiles

Keep your bio and information short and precise. Also try to make sure no stranger work out much about you from your profile picture’s background, bio, and other information.

5. Padlock

Have you ever noticed a padlock symbol in the browser address bar? It means that specific website is secure, so before you give your private or financial details on any website check that padlock icon is there in the address bar. If it’s not there, do not share any such information.

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Disclaimer: TeentalkIndia does not offer emergency services and is not a crisis intervention centre, if you or someone you know is experiencing acute distress or is suicidal/self harming, please contact the nearest hospital or emergency/crisis management services or helplines.